RRND Email Full Text (Scheduled)

  • Bosch agrees to pay $36 million bribe as DOJ declines prosecution in export case

    Source: United Press International

    “German engineering and technology firm Bosch has agreed to pay a $36 million [bribe] to resolve federal allegations that it exported restricted products and software to China’s Huawei. Federal prosecutors announced the agreement Wednesday, saying the Bosch resolution was the National Security Division’s first declination under the Justice Department’s new corporate self-disclosure policy. The company has agreed to forfeit the $11.4 million in profits it made in the alleged transactions, with a portion being credited against the [bribe]. As a result, the NSD has declined to prosecute the company.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2026/06/18/Bosch-pays-export-fine/5371781769505/

  • Bank of England holds interest rates at 3.75% amid Iran war peace prospects

    Source: CNBC

    “The Bank of England held U.K. interest rates at 3.75% on Thursday, as policymakers continue to balance the need to address above-target inflation with lackluster economic output. The hold, which was in-line with the expectations of economists polled by Reuters, was backed by seven of the nine monetary policy committee members in the BOE’s May meeting. BoE chief economist Huw Pill and Megan Greene, an external member of the rates-setting Monetary Policy Committee, were the two dissenting voices. Pill and Greene both cast votes to hike the BOE’s ‘base rate’ by 25 basis points to 4%.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/18/inflation-interest-rates-uk-bank-of-england-iran-deal.html

  • Ecuador: Suspected gang leader shot dead in flower bouquet ambush at airport

    Source: BBC News [UK state media]

    “An Ecuadorean man, who police accuse of leading a faction of one of the country’s most feared criminal gangs, has been shot dead as he was leaving the airport in Ecuador’s largest city, Guayaquil. Security footage shows two young men waiting outside the arrivals terminal holding stuffed toys and flowers before one of them approaches the victim, pulls his gun from behind a teddy and shoots him point-blank. Police have detained two teenagers in connection with the crime, the latest in a widespread wave of gang violence. … Ecuador’s interior minister, John Reimberg, identified the victim of Wednesday’s attack as 39-year-old Carlos Alberto Suástegui Villanueva, who he said was the leader of the Los Águilas gang in El Triunfo, a region east of Guayaquil.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4gy2l30dd0o

  • Three Saudi-flagged supertankers sail through Hormuz after Iran deal signed, data shows

    Source: Reuters

    “Three Saudi-flagged supertankers with six million barrels of crude onboard sailed through the Strait of Hormuz ​hours after U.S. President Donald Trump signed a deal with Iran over an ‌end to their war, ship tracking data showed on Thursday. Other tankers showed their positions sailing through the strait on public ship tracking on Thursday after weeks of ships concealing their voyages when crossing ​through the waterway. The sailings from Saudi ports were the biggest departures through ​the strait in weeks, according to Reuters analysis of shipping movements. Saudi Arabia ⁠has mainly used its Red Sea port terminal of Yanbu to ship out oil ​due to the conflict which started on February 28 and which has stopped hundreds ​of millions of barrels of oil from leaving from Gulf producer ports through the Strait of Hormuz.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/three-saudi-flagged-supertankers-sail-through-hormuz-after-iran-deal-signed-data-2026-06-18/

  • Trump’s firing power faces twin SCOTUS tests, but one agency may get special treatment

    Source: Fox News

    “Two high-stakes Supreme Court battles over President Donald Trump’s authority to remove federal officials could reshape the balance of power in Washington, but legal experts say the justices may draw a sharp line between the cases. At the center of the debate are Slaughter v. Trump, involving the firing of Federal Trade Commission Commissioner Rebecca Kelly Slaughter, and Trump v. Cook, involving Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook. While both cases touch on presidential removal power, legal scholars say the disputes present fundamentally different legal questions. In Slaughter, the administration is directly challenging statutory restrictions on the president’s ability to remove FTC commissioners, arguing that limits on the president’s authority to fire commissioners violate his Article II executive powers. But in Cook, the central question is whether Trump met the Federal Reserve Act’s ‘for cause’ removal requirement.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trumps-firing-power-faces-twin-supreme-court-tests-one-agency-may-get-special-treatment

  • Waymo recalls more than 3,800 robotaxis that might drive onto closed freeways

    Source: Engadget

    “Waymo is recalling over 3,800 of its self-driving taxis due to a software issue that could cause them to enter closed freeway construction zones at speed, according to a National Highway Traffic Safety Admininstration (NHTSA) bulletin seen by Reuters. The company is reportedly working on a fix and has ‘restricted freeway driving,’ the NHTSA safety notice states. It’s not known if Waymo had an incident that prompted the recall. … This is the second recall for the Alphabet-owned robotaxi company in a bit more than a month. Back in May, Waymo recalled 3,791 robotaxis after a vehicle drove onto a flood road in San Antonio. Fortunately, no one was injured as the taxi was unoccupied, but the vehicle was swept away by the flood. Prior to that, the fleet was recalled for a particularly dangerous situation when some of its robotaxis were seen failing to stop for school buses that had their stop signs and flashing lights deployed.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.engadget.com/2197051/waymo-recalls-3800-robotaxis-that-might-drive-onto-closed-freeways/

  • CA: San Francisco socialites found dead on side of Interstate 5

    Source: SFGate

    “The San Francisco arts community is mourning the loss of Judith and Wylie Sheldon, longtime patrons of film and performances in the city. On Monday evening, a California Highway Patrol officer discovered the couple’s bodies inside their car on the side of Interstate 5 north of Redding. Judy was 84, and Wylie was 86. … Lieutenant Josh Smith with the CHP told SFGATE that the couple was traveling to the Oregon Shakespeare Festival when, on June 15 around 5:46 p.m., a CHP officer checked on their Jeep Compass parked along the highway approaching Lake Shasta. The car’s engine was still running, and the couple was found unresponsive inside. … Smith said they do not suspect foul play.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.sfgate.com/travel/article/san-francisco-patrons-dead-22310168.php

  • Bitcoin Steadies Near $64k as Analysts Eye Floor After Hawkish Fed

    Source: Yahoo! Finance

    “Bitcoin steadied near $64,100 on Thursday, down about 1% over the past 24 hours, as traders weighed a hawkish debut from new Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh against early signs the market may be carving out a bottom. The leading cryptocurrency held a market cap near $1.29 trillion and — despite the post-Fed pullback — remained up 2% over the past week. Ethereum and Solana also eased, trading near $1,740 and $72, respectively.” (06/18/26)

    https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/crypto/articles/bitcoin-steadies-near-64k-analysts-100712131.html

  • Expert: Newly released UFO files allege China, Russia retrieved downed UAPs — and attempted to reverse-engineer them

    Source: New York Post

    “China and Russia have retrieved downed Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs) and tried to reverse-engineer them, an expert claimed, citing newly released documents. Jordan Flowers, executive director of the UAP Disclosure Foundation, said one of the most significant takeaways from the third tranche of UFO files made public on June 12 was that the US’s foreign adversaries also appear to be engaged in research that could threaten national security. … The suggestion that Russia and China may have retrieved downed UAPs and are surveilling the US’s research wasn’t the only mention of a foreign nation in the newly released files. A cable from the Central Intelligence Agency placed its assets in the African nation of Zimbabwe on high alert on July 2, 2008, after a UFO was spotted hovering directly over the country’s main airport.” (06/18/26)

    https://nypost.com/2026/06/18/us-news/newly-released-ufo-files-allege-china-and-russia-retrieved-downed-uaps-and-attempted-to-reverse-engineer-them/

  • UK: Ancient oak tree said to have sheltered legendary Robin Hood has died

    Source: ABC News

    “A massive ancient oak tree linked to the legend of Robin Hood may have been loved to death. The 1,200-year-old Major Oak in Sherwood Forest is believed to have died after it didn’t sprout leaves this spring, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds said Thursday. Visitors who viewed the tree’s gnarled limbs and sprawling canopy in Nottingham over the past two centuries compressed the soil around it, making it difficult for rain to reach its roots, the conservation group said. … The tree is said to have sheltered Robin Hood, the legendary 13th century bandit who stole from the rich and gave to the poor and took refuge in the forest when being pursued by the sheriff of Nottingham.” (06/18/26)

    https://abcnews.com/International/wireStory/ancient-oak-tree-sheltered-legendary-robin-hood-died-133988689

  • Apple to raise prices as AI boom pushes up chip costs

    Source: BBC News [UK state media]

    “Apple plans to raise the prices of its products as the cost of the memory chips it uses has surged, the technology giant’s boss has said. Tim Cook, Apple’s outgoing chief executive, told the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) that price increases were ‘unavoidable’ as the situation around memory chips had become ‘unsustainable.’ He did not say when prices would rise or which products would be affected. It is also unclear whether the price hikes will affect the iPhone 18, which is expected to be launched in September.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c3wyxvqdx1zo

  • Hegseth announces six-month review of American forces in Europe, blasts NATO allies for putting troops “at risk”

    Source: Fox News

    “US defense secretary] Pete Hegseth had harsh words for NATO allies during an address to his European counterparts on Thursday, announcing a six-month review of U.S. force deployment on the continent. Hegseth said the review’s outcome will depend on how quickly European nations act to support themselves militarily. ‘This will be a real review. It will be designed to ensure that NATO is moving fast and irreversibly toward Europe leading, stepping up to take primary responsibility for the defense of Europe,’ he told NATO officials in Brussels. Hegseth also lashed out at European countries for refusing to assist U.S. forces in the war against Iran, particularly those that withheld use of military bases.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/hegseth-announces-6-month-review-american-forces-europe-blasts-nato-allies-putting-troops-risk

  • Niger: Gunmen attack airport in capital as explosions, gunfire heard

    Source: The Hill

    “Gunmen attacked the main airport in Niger’s capital of Niamey early Thursday morning, leading to an exchange of fire and explosions, witnesses and a local security official said. Security forces were deployed to repel the attack after the gunmen breached the airport security, said the official …. It was the second attack at Diori Hamani International Airport in Niamey this year, after the Islamic State group claimed responsibility for a similar attack in January.” (06/18/26)

    https://thehill.com/homenews/ap/ap-international/ap-gunmen-attack-airport-in-nigers-capital-as-explosions-gunfire-heard/


  • Tail Wags Dog

    Source: The Realist Review
    by Martin Sieff

    “It should be cold comfort indeed, but the successive inability of one US administration after another to control Israel and the extraordinary passion with which the leaders of Western Europe, Canada and NATO continue to defy the United States to risk thermonuclear world war with Russia at the whims of Ukrainian junta leader Volodymyr Zelensky are not unprecedented. For the dark, universally unacknowledged world history of the past 120 years is clear: Tails Wag Dogs. Global superpowers and great continent-spanning empires are brought into needless total conflict and utter mutually assured destruction by the machinations, betrayals and petty intrigues of tiny postage stamp states — usually with unacknowledged, disgusting and even genocidal recent political histories.” (06/18/26)

    https://therealistreview.substack.com/p/tail-wags-dog

  • Sound Money, Artificial Intelligence, and the Pope

    Source: Cobden Centre
    by Max Rangeley

    “How to safeguard the human person in the time of artificial intelligence? It is hardly a surprise that Pope Leo XIV in answering that question in his first encyclical does not include money as part of the solution. More is the pity. The present unsound money regime has abetted vast malinvestment in the digital revolution now in its AI phase. Malinvestment takes various forms and is driven by mal signalling in capital markets caused by monetary inflation. Alongside the legal and constitutional backbone of the free-market economy falters. The build-up of the surveillance state is one consequence. All of this endangers ‘the human person.'” (06/18/26)

    https://www.cobdencentre.org/2026/06/sound-money-artificial-intelligence-and-the-pope/

  • “Sit Down, Theodore!” Slang and Spontaneous Order

    Source: Liberalism.org
    by Sarah Skwire

    The other day, I texted my youngest a reminder to take out the trash. In response I received, ‘sit down theodore.’ I was, to say the least, confused. It turns out that ‘sit down theodore’ had evolved as a complicated joke with a friend about the word ‘noted.’ First it became ‘no ted.’ That transformed into ‘stop it, teddy’ then into ‘enough, teddy.’ That morphed into ‘sit teddy’ and finally ‘sit down theodore.’ The joke became so ingrained in their texting conversations that they set the autocorrect feature on their phones to transform the word ‘noted’ into ‘sit down theodore’ whenever they typed it. All of this explained the text I received, but it also got me thinking about one of the most important aspects of a liberal society — spontaneous order.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.liberalism.org/p/sit-down-theodore-slang-and-spontaneous-order

  • Mandatory Internet IDs

    Source: Common Sense
    by Paul Jacob

    “An assault on your freedom to use your computer without having to ‘verify your age’ has migrated from states like California, Colorado, and New York to the United States Congress. This is the so-called Parents Decide Act, which would ‘require operating system providers to verify the age of any user of an operating system.’ … ‘Save the children’ is the familiar sales pitch, but if government is in charge of saving the children, our children are in trouble.” (06/18/26)

    https://thisiscommonsense.org/2026/06/18/mandatory-internet-ids/

  • Lessons from Trump’s Reckless Iran War

    Source: The American Conservative
    by Doug Bandow

    “[T]he Blunderer-in-Chief’s disastrous war has at least one silver lining: It inadvertently demonstrated the case for closing U.S. bases throughout the Middle East and bringing American forces home. Disengagement is long overdue, especially for an administration supposedly committed to America First.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.theamericanconservative.com/lessons-from-trumps-reckless-iran-war/

  • We Must Restore Congress as the Predominant Branch of Government

    Source: The Nation
    by US Representative Jamie Raskin (D-MD)

    “You will hear no more disorienting or self-defeating a platitude uttered on Capitol Hill in this 250th year of the American journey, by politicians of either party, than the sixth-grade dogma that America has ‘three co-equal branches of government.’ That ‘co-equal’ thing is confected nonsense. To begin with, if it is a real word at all, ‘co-equal’ is a mediocre concoction whose lackadaisical users cannot even decide whether it should be hyphenated. By adding the gratuitous prefix to the indispensable stand-alone word, which the Declaration of Independence applied to people, ‘co-equal’ establishes a confusing false equivalency among institutions, making it seem as if the framers wanted the three branches to be involved in a perpetual game of rock-paper-scissors with no apparent preference for actual progress toward a more perfect union.” [editor’s note: Ironic that this do-nothing Congressthug is writing this screed; if he and his colleagues ever bothered to pass a competent bill he might have some standing – SAT] (06/18/26)

    https://www.thenation.com/article/society/congress-constitution-jamie-raskin/

  • Europe Refuses to Spend on Defense. That Means America Needs to Stop Defending Europe

    Source: Cato Institute
    by Doug Bandow

    “Rather than telling Europe how much to spend on its defense, the Trump administration should begin a phased military disengagement from the continent.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.cato.org/commentary/europe-refuses-spend-defense-means-america-needs-stop-defending-europe

  • Petty and Idiotic Immigration Tyranny in the World Cup

    Source: Future of Freedom Foundation
    by Jacob G Hornberger

    “I can’t help but wonder whether advocates of America’s socialist (i.e., central planning) system of immigration controls and the vicious immigration police state that comes with it are proud of how their system is being used against the Iranian soccer team that is competing in the World Cup games here in the United States. All three soccer games in which the Iranian team is competing are being played inside the United States. But with their socialist system of immigration controls, U.S. officials wield the omnipotent power to determine who enters the United States and under what conditions.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.fff.org/2026/06/18/petty-and-idiotic-immigration-tyranny-in-the-world-cup/

  • California’s Insane “Prove You’re Gay” Law

    Source: Town Hall
    by Derek Hunter

    “I challenge you to prove your sexual orientation. Go! Not sure how to do that? Good, because I don’t really want to know what you might come up with to prove it, any of it, in any direction. Plus, I’m not really interested; I don’t care what you do as long as whoever you do it with is of age and willing. That being said, California is asking some people to prove that they’re gay so their companies can qualify for certain government contracts. Why? Because if there are set-asides for gay-owned businesses, someone might simply claim to be bisexual and get some of those contracts. How can you prove they’re lying? The state has a checklist to make sure recipients of gay set-asides are gay enough, which means we finally found some fraud Democrats are against.” [editor’s note: It reminds me of when conservatives were claiming that jobsite quotas would mean daily blowjobs for the foreman – SAT] (06/18/26)

    https://townhall.com/columnists/derekhunter/2026/06/18/californias-insane-prove-youre-gay-law-n2677924

  • The Tripartite University

    Source: Law & Liberty
    by Ronald W Dworkin

    “A separate division for social activism would at least allow for truth in advertising.” (06/18/26)

    https://lawliberty.org/the-tripartite-university/

  • Five Ideas to Survive a Hot, Dry Summer

    Source: Property and Environment Research Center
    by staff

    “As American summers grow drier and hotter, the institutions built to manage lands, water, and wildlife have not kept pace. These institutions, made up of laws, policies, contracts, and other rules that govern how we allocate water, manage forests, prevent wildfire, and conserve wildlife, were designed for a cooler, wetter, and more stable environment. This report focuses on helping institutions adapt to our changing reality. It proposes practical recommendations within five topical areas that can help people and ecosystems weather this summer as well as the years ahead.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.perc.org/2026/06/18/five-ideas-to-survive-a-hot-dry-summer/

  • India reckons with “a woman’s worth”

    Source: Christian Science Monitor
    by staff

    “In a society where a woman’s status is still largely viewed as subordinate to that of a man, a recent ruling by India’s Supreme Court spotlights the significant, and largely unacknowledged, contributions of women to both individual households and the national economy. In dry legalese, the June 11 verdict establishes a monetary value for ‘loss of domestic care’ in a compensation case for a 2001 vehicle crash that claimed the life of a young wife and mother of three. The court granted the woman’s family a sum of 6.3 million rupees (about $66,000) – more than 25 times the initial award offered in 2003. And the judges also set a minimum estimate for domestic ‘homemaker’ duties at 30,000 rupees ($317) per month – which is about 10 times the amount previously used. Arriving at the current award and the benchmark for future compensation is about much more than numbers, however.” (06/17/26)

    https://www.csmonitor.com/Editorials/the-monitors-view/2026/0617/India-reckons-with-a-woman-s-worth

  • The Nanny-Statists Lack Evidence for Their Campaigns

    Source: Foundation for Economic Education
    by Christopher Snowdon

    “In my new book, Inside the Sausage Factory, I examine four campaigns for ‘public health’ policies in the 2010s and examined all the evidence that was marshalled for and against them. It turns out that the evidence for them wasn’t very good and there wasn’t much evidence marshalled against them, but that isn’t really the point. Nor does it matter that all the policies failed. A bad policy introduced on the basis of poor evidence is still an evidence-based policy. The question—or my question at any rate—was whether the four policies were evidence-based at all.” (06/18/26)

    https://fee.org/articles/the-nanny-statists-lack-evidence-for-their-campaigns/

  • 1776 All-Stars: Why a Pseudonymous Anti-Federalist Is My Favorite Founder

    Source: Reason
    by Jesse Walker

    “I do not know my favorite Founder’s name. I just know that in 1788 a Baltimore newspaper published a series of pseudonymous essays where he warned against standing armies, called for a bill of rights, and declared, paraphrasing Jonathan Swift, that ‘laws are cobwebs, catching only the flies and letting the wasps escape.’ See-sawing between fears of an aristocratic legislature and a tyrannical executive, he argued that we’d be best off with the highly decentralized democracy found in certain Swiss cantons.” (06/18/26)

    https://reason.com/2026/06/18/1776-all-stars-a-farmer/

  • Humans Create Empires For The Same Reason They Create Egos

    Source: Caitlin Johnstone, Rogue Journalist
    by Caitlin Johnstone

    “It’s all about the impulse to control. We come into this world boundless and free with eyes full of wonder, but within a few years our minds create and solidify a sense of self around which our mental lives revolve. We do this because we are helpless when we are born, and things happen which are uncomfortable or startling, so we naturally begin seeking out strategies to control what happens to us. Before you know it we’ve got vast spires of psychological architecture within us dedicated to using thought to promote the interests and security of an entirely symbolic me-character that we made up in our minds. And from that point on we are cut off from the Eden of perception.” (06/18/26)

    https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2026/06/18/humans-create-empires-for-the-same-reason-they-create-egos/

  • How Stable Is the China-North Korea Alliance?

    Source: Antiwar.com
    by Ted Galen Carpenter

    “There is an indisputably crucial history of very close relations between Beijing and Pyongyang. In late 1950, PRC forces intervened in the war between communist North Korea and anti-communist South Korea (whose government was massively supported with military personnel and weaponry from the United States and other Western countries). The armistice that ended the fighting in 1953 left the Korean Peninsula split between two intensely hostile countries, with the United States and the PRC firmly backing their respective clients throughout the remainder of the Cold War. Despite that history, the current connection between the two communist states is decidedly more nuanced, ambiguous, and even contentious than the lips and teeth cliché would imply.” (06/18/26)

    https://original.antiwar.com/ted_galen_carpenter/2026/06/17/how-stable-is-the-china-north-korea-alliance

  • America Doesn’t Need a New East India Company

    Source: The Daily Economy
    by Iain Murray

    “From semiconductors to artificial intelligence, modern proposals for public ownership risk repeating the mistakes Smith identified 250 years ago.” (06/18/26)

    https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/america-doesnt-need-a-new-east-india-company/

  • If the US Government Won’t Respect Freedom of Speech, AI Firms Should Move

    Source: Garrison Center
    by Thomas L Knapp

    “Code is speech (as ruled by a US district court and affirmed by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in Bernstein v. Department of Justice). AI models are code. Therefore, AI models are speech, and the government doesn’t get to control them. Not that the current administration, or any other, or Congress, or the courts, can be counted on to respect the Constitution. The ink wasn’t dry on that document before the American political establishment started ignoring its inconveniences. Which leaves Anthropic and other artificial intelligence firms in a bind. … As a practical matter, if Anthropic et al. want to innovate and compete in a growing market that’s already changing how the world works, they need to get away from the US government, which means getting away from the US.” (06/18/26)

    https://thegarrisoncenter.org/archives/20703

  • How to Contain the Oligarchs

    Source: Washington Monthly
    by David Lingelbach & Valentina Rodríguez Guerra

    “Rule by the rich may look inevitable, but history shows it’s not. From ancient Greece to New Deal America to today’s Hungary, democracies have found ways to separate private fortunes from public power.” (06/18/26)

    https://washingtonmonthly.com/2026/06/18/how-to-contain-the-oligarchs/

  • From Victimhood to Agency: Understanding What is Up to Us

    Source: The Daily Economy
    by Barry Brownstein

    “Excuses protect us from guilt, but they also rob us of hope. The habit of denying responsibility may be one of the greatest obstacles to personal and social flourishing.” (06/18/26)

    https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/from-victimhood-to-agency-understanding-what-is-up-to-us/

  • Dems want us to focus on Graham Platner’s policies; he fails Maine there, too

    Source: Fox News
    by Laurel Libby

    “Now that Graham Platner is officially the Democratic Party’s chosen candidate to face Sen. Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins this November, his campaign staff and the far-left establishment that back him will undoubtedly spend the next five months trying to contain the fallout from his personal history. They will ask voters to look past the domestic abuse allegations, the rhetoric glorifying political violence, the racially charged comments and the Nazi tattoo. They will argue that those controversies are distractions and urge Mainers to focus instead on the issues facing our state. As a Republican serving in the Maine House, I wholeheartedly agree. Because when Mainers look beyond the colorful Platner headlines and turn their focus to his policies, they will find an extreme version of the same progressive agenda that has already made life harder for working families across our state.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/democrats-want-us-focus-graham-platners-policies-fails-maine

  • Today’s New energy: Clean, Cheap, Safe, and Local

    Source: CounterPunch
    by John K White

    “According to the International Energy Agency, the increase in low-emission power generation last year had already outstripped electricity supply growth, almost all of which was solar and wind as coal- and oil-fuelled power generation dropped. Even more energy dominoes have begun falling since the start of the US-Iran war, aided by rising gasoline prices, as much as 30% in the US and Europe. Reaching 20 million new car sales (roughly 25%) in 2025, increased EV adoption is also putting a dent in global petroleum sales.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.counterpunch.org/2026/06/18/todays-new-energy-clean-cheap-safe-and-local/

  • Oppose Graham Platner for His Socialism, Not Just His Outrageous Behavior

    Source: Ludwig von Mises Institute
    by William L Anderson

    “Thanks in large part to the erratic and often-destructive policies coming from Donald Trump’s White House, the Democrats are favored to win both houses of Congress, as they hope to flip several Republican-held seats in the House and the Senate. One of the most closely-watched races is the Senate campaign in Maine, where upstart Democrat Graham Platner is favored to end Sen. Susan Collins’s long political career. Platner’s campaign has been deemed controversial mostly because of his unhinged behavior with women, his Nazi tattoo, and social media statements that alone would have disqualified most people even before they could run for office. … the political crudeness that has become the hallmark of Trump and his MAGA followers is not the reason that someone as morally compromised as Platner is now the darling of the Democratic Party. Instead, they love Platner because of his unabashed fealty to socialism.” (06/18/26)

    https://mises.org/mises-wire/oppose-graham-platner-his-socialism-not-just-his-outrageous-behavior

  • The Miseducation of American Journalists

    Source: Quillette
    by Steve Salerno

    “Understanding what has gone wrong with journalism in the US requires an understanding of what has gone wrong with the country’s journalism schools.” (06/18/26)

    https://quillette.com/2026/06/18/the-miseducation-of-american-journalists-media-journalism-school/

  • Foundations of Public Choice: A Primer

    Source: EconLog
    by Michael Munger

    “Public Choice is more than you think. The usual quick definition — ‘applying economics to the study of politics’ — is not wrong, but it’s facile. Public Choice asks how political actors use information and respond to incentives. That’s a lot more than just an application of economic tools to a new context.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.econlib.org/library/columns/y2026/mungerpublicchoice

  • How to Keep Loving America

    Source: The Bulwark
    by Mona Charen

    “The approach of July Fourth is making my heart hurt. Love of this country is deep-dyed in my soul, but pondering how or even whether to celebrate the semiquincentennial provokes a riot of mixed feelings.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.thebulwark.com/p/how-to-keep-loving-america-trump-ufc-white-house-de-niro-immigration-polls

  • After the Iran War, is UAE the odd man out?

    Source: Responsible Statecraft
    by Giorgio Cafiero

    “The roles played by Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey in facilitating the ‘Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding’ underscore the extent to which regional actors have invested in creating off-ramps for the United States and Iran, and steering the conflict away from further escalation. Across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), this diplomatic off-ramp has garnered broad relief that the conflict appears to be moving toward de-escalation as Washington and Tehran prepare for talks on the sensitive nuclear and non-nuclear issues. But where the United Arab Emirates (UAE) fits into this broader picture is far from straightforward.” (06/18/26)

    https://responsiblestatecraft.org/uae-iran-war/

  • The Democrats Offer No Real Alternative to Trump’s “Donroe Doctrine” for Latin America

    Source: Common Dreams
    by Roger D Harris & John Perry

    “Donald Trump’s second term has precipitated a tsunami of criticism from Democrats over his foreign policy. Yet when it comes to Washington’s efforts to dominate Latin America and the Caribbean, the substantive dispute (if there is any substance remaining, once stripped of partisan bickering) is less about ends than means. Beneath the rhetoric of inter-party conflict lies a broad bipartisan consensus in favor of promoting US hemispheric hegemony and crushing governments that resist it, with Venezuela, Cuba, and Nicaragua at the forefront. While Democrats frequently portray Trump as reckless, they generally accept the underlying premises of economic coercion, political intervention, and regime-change pressure. Their objections mainly focus on the execution of policy rather than its legitimacy. Under Democratic administrations, the US forged and institutionalized what may be its most effective instrument of hegemony.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.commondreams.org/opinion/dems-donroe-doctrine

  • No More Cupbearers

    Source: Liberal Currents
    by Eric Robinson

    “A new liberal foreign policy must be built on personnel with real experience, not glossy yes-men with ivied pedigrees.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.liberalcurrents.com/no-more-cupbearers/

  • Strategic Ambiguity (If We Must)

    Source: Libertarian Institute
    by Joseph Solis-Mullen

    “In recent years, critics on both sides of the aisle have taken aim at the longstanding policy of strategic ambiguity toward Taiwan. They argue that Washington should abandon ambiguity and embrace ‘strategic clarity,’ explicitly pledging to fight China over Taiwan. Others, such as Hoover Institute Fellow Eyck Freymann, have offered more sophisticated sounding alternatives like ‘structured ambiguity,’ attempting to codify precisely what America would and would not do in various contingencies, particularly involving gray zone activities. But abandoning a long-established policy that, whatever its faults, has prevented a major war between great powers for over half a century, in favor of a new policy, would be a serious mistake.” (06/18/26)

    https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/strategic-ambiguity-if-we-must/

  • Waiting For The Miracle

    Source: Astral Codex Ten
    by Scott Alexander

    “In 1917, three children in Fatima, Portugal claimed to have seen the Virgin Mary. They promised she would perform a miracle on a certain day in October. Nearly 100,000 pilgrims arrived, hoping to see whatever happened, and nearly all report that the sun turned pale, changed color, and spun around. Many other writers have investigated the children and their visions, but I was fixated on this sun miracle. … One of the first things I found was that there were many other sun miracles – at least ten! – similar to Fatima.” (06/18/26)

    https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/waiting-for-the-miracle

  • Vance’s Dishonest Diplomatic Spin

    Source: Eunomia
    by Daniel Larison

    “Vance is trying to spin U.S.-Israeli aggression as having been successful in delivering something that it absolutely did not deliver.” (06/18/26)

    https://daniellarison.substack.com/p/vances-dishonest-diplomatic-spin

  • The Voter’s Audit: How to Spot a True Fiscal Conservative in 2026

    Source: Karl Dickey’s Freedom Vanguard
    by Karl Dickey

    “Don’t be fooled by campaign rhetoric. Here is how to evaluate voting records and hold Florida candidates accountable this election cycle.” (06/17/26)

    https://palmbeachexaminer.substack.com/p/the-voters-audit-how-to-spot-a-true

  • Trump showing the world, G7 leaders who’s the “boss”

    Source: New York Post
    by Miranda Devine

    “‘I’m the boss,’ President Trump joked when he arrived a bit late to a meeting with G7 leaders in France Wednesday. He is. That’s what his detractors forget. America is ‘the boss’ again, the colossus. Iran doesn’t bully us. Israel doesn’t instruct us. Europe can sneer at Donald Trump all it likes, but it’s a supplicant. China respects us. Canada bows. Trump understands power, and it rests easy on his shoulders. He joked about it at the G7 in his relaxed American fashion, and European leaders now get it. They laughed along, but they understood. By the time he had emerged from a glittering dinner at Versailles to fly home, he had signed the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Iran that has the great and the good worked up into a symphony of hysterical catastrophizing.” [editor’s note: It’s sometimes hard to discern what percentages of Devine’s brain are “clueless” vs. “crazy,” but the total of other percentages is zero – TLK] (06/17/26)

    https://nypost.com/2026/06/17/opinion/miranda-devine-trump-is-showing-the-world-g7-leaders-whos-the-boss-and-deserves-respect-for-his-deal-making/

  • This Is Why Missouri Families Need Choice

    Source: Show-Me Institute
    by Susan Pendergrass

    “Why do families need school choice? The answer is straightforward — a single, zip-code-assigned school cannot possibly be everything to every child. And when a school fails a student, that student needs a lifeline. A recent iteration of EdChoice’s long-running Public Opinion Tracker survey shows that roughly one in four parents indicate that they have had to switch their children’s school at some point. When you dig into why these families are switching, the reasons are straightforward. Parents pull their children out of schools because of unfortunate, everyday problems that directly impact a child’s well-being and future.” (06/17/26)

    https://showmeinstitute.org/article/education/this-is-why-missouri-families-need-choice/